ESPN.com has posted a major story on UFC's "Next Big
Thing" Brock Lesnar vs Ultimate Fight Champion Randy Couture, the main event
this Saturday night in Las Vegas for UFC 91.
You can read the entire article, which is really well done,
HERE
Is it possible for a mixed martial artist to evolve within the
confines of the Octagon after just two fights?
Is it possible that Brock Lesnar, the former WWE star who was
taken out by leg lock in 89 seconds against Frank Mir in February, was a new
fighter by the time he stepped into the cage for his three-round domination of
Heath Herring in August?
Lesnar will have his chance to show whether he has matured into
one of the UFC's top heavyweights when he takes on
no-longer-sidelined-by-a-contract-dispute heavyweight champ Randy Couture, who
hasn't fought in more than a year, at UFC 91 in Las Vegas on Saturday.
Lesnar's collegiate wrestling background, athleticism and size
have given him all the building blocks to grow at a far more rapid pace than
most fighters. And like an NFL rookie quarterback who throws his first pick,
Lesnar has only grown since the Mir loss because of his devotion to the craft
and to not making the same mistakes twice.
"That first fight for me against Frank was a huge fight for
me," Lesnar said during Thursday's conference call. "I went in, obviously, I
learned a lot, just to relax and control a fight and I've got 15 minutes to win
a fight. … Coming off the [Heath] Herring fight, I just try to improve in the
gym off of that. We watched that fight over, probably, 100 times looking for
other things I can do to stay busy and to stay more dominant … There's a lot of
things we picked apart just to grow as a fighter. I want to grow every single
day."
For the Couture fight, Lesnar took his training camp to a
remote spot in northern Minnesota. For previous bouts, Lesnar trained at a gym
in the Twin Cities, where locals remember his storied NCAA wrestling career at
the University of Minnesota, where he won a national championship, and WWE
followers recognize him from his days as "The Next Big Thing."
This time around, Lesnar wanted to prepare away from any
potential distractions for his fight against Couture, who will fight for the
first time since August '07 but has trained continuously with a deep stable of
fighters from his Las Vegas gym. Couture emerged as a heavyweight top dog after
beating Tim Sylvia and Gabriel Gonzaga in 2007, and he has an extensive
Greco-Roman wrestling background. Because of the way he has performed in recent
years, few believe his age, 45, puts him at a disadvantage.
Lesnar said last week that he doesn't have any concerns about
Couture, but he also respects his legacy. Lesnar said he isolated himself so he
could study the most important opponent of his brief MMA career. He also brought
in former Minnesota wrestling assistant Marty Morgan, who trained with Couture
as both attempted to make the Greco-Roman wrestling teams for the 1992 and 1996
Olympics.
"I had to move my camp a couple hours away up in northern
Minnesota," Lesnar said. "We're out in the back woods for about eight and a half
or nine weeks, kind of away from the outside world. All we had was Randy Couture
fights and Randy Couture books to read … so we got to know Randy pretty well."
Anyone who watched Lesnar's first two UFC fights could see the
difference between the two.
Against Mir, Lesnar did what few expected from an inexperienced
fighter: He dominated Mir for the bulk of their match before making a costly
mistake against the former champ.
Five months later, Lesnar struck Pride veteran Herring with a
right hand in the opening seconds that catapulted him back to somewhere in
Japan, where he fought before joining the UFC in 2007. But instead of pouncing
prematurely, Lesnar bided his time and proceeded to dominate Herring, who
entered the ring in the best shape of his life, for three rounds.
The added patience and precision paid off for Lesnar.
But Couture has had his share of beastly characters. The
6-foot-1, 225-pound fighter didn't have a size advantage when he faced Sylvia
(6-8, 260) and Gonzaga (6-2, 252). But at 6-3, 275 -- depending what scale you
use -- Lesnar will pose a unique challenge to Couture, who used his wrestling
skills to control Gonzaga and Sylvia. Couture said he had trouble fighting
gargantuan sparring partners to imitate Lesnar. But he also had the same
problems during his preparation for Sylvia.
"It's hard to fight guys that are going to simulate a guy like
Brock or a guy like Tim … so there's been some déjà vu during this 10-week
camp," Couture said. I think the outcome in the Sylvia [fight] was good, and I
think it's going to pay off again in this fight."
Heading into Saturday's matchup, Lesnar talks like a confident
fighter who is convinced that Couture will have to figure out a way to stop him,
rather than the other way around. He's content with his own development in
recent months, but he also is serious about making adjustments, as his strides
in the past year have proved.
"He's a well-rounded fighter," Lesnar said about Couture.
"Definitely experienced and a veteran in the Octagon. For me, it's just to try
to dominate this fight and control, and I think he's got some of the same ideas,
try to nullify me and my weaknesses, which I don't think I have too many … . If
I exposed any weaknesses against Herring, we fixed them."